Non-Muslim teen walks a mile in friends’ shoes, wears a hijab

She was walking home from school, with traffic rushing all around, when Zion Lourdes Perez tore off her hijab. Feeling like a target at 15 was nothing she'd imagined when she decided, on a lark, to wear the head scarf worn by Muslim women.

Perez, raised Catholic, is a co-founder and president of the Muslim Students Association at Franklin High, and while many students tried on the covering for an hour or two during "modesty week," Perez wanted a deeper understanding of what it meant to broadcast religion on one's sleeve — or head, as it were. The experience last year made her think about Jews forced to wear gold stars during the Holocaust.

"It was overwhelming," she said. "I felt like people were staring at me, whipping around to look — really negative vibes, like I was some kind of threat or foreigner. When I tore it off, I was relieved. All I wanted was to blend in."

But Perez had intended to wear the hijab for a full week, not just a few hours, so the next day she put it on again.

"I have a whole new respect now," she said of Muslim women, many of whom believe they must show their affiliation to a religion increasingly under attack on social media, political rallies and on the streets outside Perez's school. "They really have to be strong. It takes tremendous courage to walk around wearing hijab."

Franklin High School student Zion Lourdes Perez, a Latina raised Catholic, wore a hijab for a week to better understand what it is like to be a Muslim woman in Seattle. Hear her speak about the experience. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)

South Seattle is often described as the region's most diverse neighborhood. But even as an ersatz-Muslim, Perez felt safe only within Franklin's walls.

Other students echo this perspective. During a workshop at the school recently to honor the legacy of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Perez and 40 other teens gathered to talk about "Islamaphobia" in the wider community. Most of the Muslims reported being followed or gawked at as soon as they stepped beyond their hilly campus.

Only one white student, Samuel Aronwald, was present to listen.

"I feel like this is a really large issue," he said, noting the evolution in his own views. "Six months ago, I didn't understand Muslim people and I thought Islam was not the greatest thing."

Aronwald, a senior considering psychology as a career, has begun to think hard about the effect of being part of a stigmatized group. Asked to describe the religion in one word, he whispered "misunderstood."

The number of Muslim youth at Franklin has ballooned in recent years, but many other students have little knowledge of the culture.

"They're wrestling with really complex issues," said Principal Jennifer Wiley, who met with a group of frightened youths in December to talk about the death of Hamza Warsame, a 16-year-old Muslim who died after falling from the roof of a building at Seattle Central College.

Early rumors speculated that he had been the victim of a hate crime, but Seattle police have since determined Warsame's death was an accident.

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The type of transformation Aronwald described was what had inspired Perez to help create the club, one of only two in the Seattle School District, even though she is not Muslim.

"There wasn't any place where they could connect with each other," she said. "And I didn't know much about Islam except what I saw in media. To accept other groups and cultures you have to understand them."

Wearing the hijab had been a curiosity at first. But weathering stares on the street those first few hours created in Perez an unexpected resolve to keep it on. After a few days, her friends stopped noticing.

Soon enough, she forgot about it, too.

References

  1. ^ Family rift holds several life lessons (www.seattletimes.com)
  2. ^ Unlimited Digital Access. $1 for 4 weeks. (www.seattletimes.com)


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